Defending The Air Sea Gap: Exploiting Advanced Technology and Disproportionate Response to Defend Australia (1992) By Alan Stephens
Throughout history, Australian security thinking was predicated on the notion that Australia could not be defended on the basis of its own population and resources. The idea was that it would require the help of a great and powerful friend. In the 1980s we showed that Australia could defend itself: with a carefully designed force structure and a strategic posture focused on controlling the Sea-Air Gap. Contributor topics specifically look at air surveillance, counter-air operations, airborne maritime strike, airborne anti-submarine warfare, and air-delivered strategic land strike. Australian Defence Studies Centrer
- Soft Cover
- 135 pages
- In Good Condition